Thank you Ginger for your parent training outline.  I was wondering when you 
schedule these workshops and what the attendance looks like.  We have tried 
these in our district with mixed success.  Often times the parents who attend 
are the ones already on board with reading to their children in a meaningful 
way and we never reach those parents who we would like to help. 

Robyn Hoefling
Literacy Coach Grades 3-5

________________________________________
From: ginger/rob [[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, July 26, 2009 3:23 PM
To: 1 mosaic list
Subject: [MOSAIC] think aloud parent training

This is a resend from a couple years ago.....
+++++
I actually do training in thinking aloud with the
parents. I designed this workshop as a way to begin to introduce the
comprehension strategies and being metacognitive to our parents.

Here's what I do in my hour and a half parent workshop.

First I ask the parents to turn and talk about what reading is. We chart
it. I stress that reading is much more than just reading the words. Huge
in my district. (along with reading fast!)

Next I have them turn and talk about the value of reading books with their
children and discussing them. We share back whole group. (I don't chart
this)

I briefly talk about the proficient reader research and what we now know
about what makes a strategic reader. (Reading is thinking, metacognition,
the little voice in our heads, interacting with the text, and all that....)

I go over each strategy very briefly.

I tell them that one important way they can help their children become
strategic readers is to think aloud with them as they are reading together.
Thinking aloud is great because kids need to hear the metacognitive voice
outloud that we want them to have inside when they are reading. I tell them
that they can be the examples for their children.

I then model a general think aloud for them using the book Rudy's Pond by
Eve Bunting.
Then I model a think aloud with a Clifford book to show that you can think
aloud when reading a variety of texts to all ages.

 I make sure that I give make connections, sensory images,
questions, and inferences. I try to determine importance and synthesize
along the way. I also try to do some rereading or fix ups along the way.
But I do not talk about WHAT I am doing (at the time), I just read and think
out loud naturally like I would in my classroom or with a child.

I then have them turn and talk and share what they SAW ME DOING and HEARD ME
SAYING as I was reading the text. They share back whole group.  I stress
the things they don't notice.

Then I pass out to the tables the picture books that I use when training
adults (teachers/parents/administrators) to think aloud. I have them EACH
pick a book and then get a partner (if the group is huge I have the partner
group pick ONE book). I give them the following directions. This is always
hard for adults. They want to make it into a discussion and that is NOT my
purpose for this exercise. I want them to simply MODEL (the reader is the
one doing the work) a think aloud.

I tell them that at first this may not be easy and it may feel
uncomfortable. But all they have to do is read and pay attention to when
they have some thinking. When that happens, they are to STOP and share that
thinking. I tell them they can start out by saying, "I'm thinking......."
if that helps. They are NOT retelling the story. They are simply sharing
their thinking as they are reading.  Whatever bubbles up into their brains
or comes from their heart.

1.  Person A goes first with his/her book. Person B is to represent the
child (or the class if you are training teachers). For this exercise Person
B is NOT TO INTERACT with Person A- just "receive" the thinking. Person A
reads and shares his/her thinking.

2.  When about 10 minutes has gone by I tell them to switch and Person B now
will do the think aloud with his/her book.  Person A is to "receive" the
thinking.  Person B reads and shares his/her thinking.

3.  After 10 more minutes (and yes they often do not finish the books and
BOY do they want to!!!) I have them turn and talk and share how it FELT to
do the thinking outloud. We then share back whole group.

I've mentioned before how I choose VERY emotionally charged books. I do this
on purpose so that they will have something to think about. I warn them
that some of the books are tear jerkers. I even have a box of
tissues ready in case! But when reading with their children they can think
aloud with
any text. I do encourage them to read books TO their children that are
above their reading level. Because we know that kids can comprehend at a
higher listening level than they can read.

I then have them turn and talk about how they now envision themselves using
thinking aloud with their children. I tell them to imagine themselves
grabbing small snatches of time to get into a book- even in their busy
lives. Ultimately both the parent and the child will do the thinking aloud
as they are reading together. But the parents can be so instrumental if
they think aloud with their kids.

I field any questions and we are off.
----------------
I hope this makes sense. It is really rather simple and from the feedback,
the impact is POWERFUL. It's like I introduced them to the most amazing
thing. They leave excited and very grateful. (It cracks me up actually!)

This works exactly the same with teachers and administrators. Practicing a
"general" think aloud was something I never did when I first started
teaching the
strategies. I read MOT and jumped right in to my first strategy study:
schema. I did
think alouds with connections. Thinking aloud was awkward for me for a very
long time. I had to preread the books and mark where and what I was going
to say. I then moved to just marking the stopping places and now after
several years, I can pick up just about any book and do a think aloud
"cold". Sometimes that's when I do my best thinking.

Now when I look back over my journey into this teaching I do many
"general" think alouds and my study on metacognition before jumping into a
strategy study.

What parent workshops have the rest of you guys done?  Let's share so we can
all get some ideas.

Ginger Weincek
grade 3
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